Would this work together

DruggedUpTurtle

Honorable
Dec 12, 2013
17
0
10,510
Hi all, I tend to come here for my answers but haven't found any so I decided to create an account and ask the community myself.

Basically I have been collecting parts for a PC and next week It will be all together.

The main thing I will be using it for is gaming/storage but I need to know if my monitor can work with the parts themselves since I've heard stuff about tearing, loss in frames etc.

Question is: Will this monitor have issues with these parts, will there be tearing, loss in frames, brightness issues anything that can go wrong, would I need to consider sizing down etc, or would it be fine... :)

Monitor: 27'' Viewsonic, 1920x1080 resolution, 1ms response rate, LED backlit, 50-75hz refresh rate
GPU: GTX 780 Superclocked
CPU: i5 Haswell 4670k OC'd to 4.2GHz
RAM: 24GB RAM
Mobo: MSI Z87 MPower

If there is anything else you need to know please post below! :)
 
Absolutely fine. You may have heard about screen tearing in regard to Vsync. Sometimes if the refresh rate isn't quite in sync with the framerate that is being produced, it can cause a slight 'tearing' effect. But that is easily remedied, and is something all monitors/cards are prone to. Not to worry.
Besides, with an Nvidia card, that problem is almost non-existent if you set vsync to 'adaptive'.

That should be a great gamer, although you seem to be spending a lot for an excessive amount of RAM. What version of Windows will you be using. Not all versions support that much.
 


Thankyou for the response!

And I have Windows 8.1.
 
As long as it is Win 8.1 x64, it should be fine with that much memory then. May I ask what you use the PC for to require so much memory? Gaming is almost all 32bit coded, meaning it can only address 4GB at most. Not trying to discourage you from getting 24GB, just don't want you to waste your money if it isn't necessary ;-)
 


Well I already had 8GB RAM left over as a gift and the 16GB actually comes with the ''bundle'' I am getting.. :)

And it is indeed 64 bit!